Why the Recovery in Tesla Stock Has Big Runway Ahead

In This Article:

Shares of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) tumbled lower through the first five months of 2019 as Wall Street seemed to throw in the towel on the Tesla stock.

Tesla Stock Still Has Plenty To Prove On The Charts
Tesla Stock Still Has Plenty To Prove On The Charts

Source: Shutterstock

Specifically, Wall Street interpreted falling delivery numbers from Tesla in early 2019 as a sign that demand was wavering and competition was building, a double headwind that would ultimately doom TSLA stock. As this thesis became the consensus, Tesla dropped from $330 to $175.

But, I think Wall Street dramatically misinterpreted this situation.

InvestorPlace - Stock Market News, Stock Advice & Trading Tips

Falling delivery numbers from Tesla in early 2019 were not a sign of slowing Tesla demand or competition building. Instead, they were a sign that the whole EV market needed to take a breather after a gang-busters multi-month stretch to end 2018. That breather is now over. The EV market is finally ramping back up. As it does, Tesla’s delivery numbers are moving significantly higher.

That’s why TSLA stock is bouncing back in June. Investors are starting to realize that the Tesla growth story isn’t dead. Instead, it just took a breather, and is now ready to get back to firing on all cylinders.

Because of this, and because Tesla stock fell so far on a flawed bear thesis, the mid to late 2019 recovery in TSLA stock has a long runway to push the stock significantly higher. Broadly, that means now looks like as good a time as ever to get bullish on TSLA.

The Tesla Growth Story Is Far From Over

The big bear thesis which dragged TSLA stock down from $330 to $175 centered around falling demand. Tesla went gang-busters in late 2018 with the Model 3 production and delivery ramp. Following that huge ramp, production and delivery numbers fell sharply in early 2019.

Investors and analysts interpreted that drop to imply falling and saturated demand, which coupled with rising competition, painted a bleak picture for Tesla’s growth narrative over the next several years.

But that big bear thesis is flawed.

In reality, the Tesla growth story is far from over. Just look at the attached chart. Despite calls for Tesla to succumb to competition in the EV market, Tesla’s share of the U.S. EV market has consistently grown over the past two years. At the end of 2017, Tesla controlled about 25% of the U.S. EV market (on a trailing twelve-month basis). Model 3 ramp in 2018 pushed that share to just north of 50% to end 2018. In mid-2019, Tesla’s trailing-twelve-month market share in the U.S. market has closed in on 60%.